... All nationalities in Yugoslavia have equal right to hoist
their national flags, but with the red five-pointed star in the
middle, as common symbol of belonging to SFR
Yugoslavia.

This is a book for the youth and not a vexillological reference
book, so the statement that the star was in the middle should not be
taken too straightforward - it is well known that some national
minorities used flags with the star in canton (e.g.Albanians). Anyway, these defaced flags existed,
they were legal and allowed by law (which does not mean that a law
described them!).
Actually, I believe that the law used similar wording allowing such
flags, but not specifying their name (and description), so that, in
theory, any ethnical community could have used a defaced flag. It is
another question if the defaced flag was used, and what its exact
design was.

Those flags were based on the national flags used by
partisan units in Tito's army during
the Second World War.

Željko Heimer 14 June 1999

When Milošević took power in Serbia, all
minorities flags disappeared. Albanians then begun to use the new
Albanian national flag (without the star).

Ivan Sarajčić, 6 May 1999

Albanian minority in Kosovo

The Albanian flag with the red star outlined
in yellow is not the flag of
Kosovo, and it has never been so. The
flag was the flag of the Albanian ethnical minority from the late 1940s to the late
1980s.

Željko Heimer, 6 May 1999

Bulgarian minority in south-eastern Serbia and
eastern Macedonia

Flag of the Bulgarian minority - Image by Željko Heimer, 12 October 2003

The flag of the Bulgarian minority was horizontally divided white-green-red with a red star
outlined in yellow placed in the middle.

Željko Heimer, 12 October 2003

Czech minority in Vojvodina and Croatia

Flag of the Czech minority - Image by Željko Heimer, 12 November 2008

According to the book Cehoslovacka brigada "Jan Ziska" (OO SUBNOR-a Daruvar, Daruvar, Croatia, SFRY, 1988), the Czech national minority used a flag horizontally divided white-red with a blue triangle at hoist (that is the Czechoslovak flag) and a yellow bordered red five-pointed star set in the middle of the white stripe. The flag was originally made for the "Jan Žiška" Czechoslovak brigade of the National Liberation Army and Partisan Units by the youth of the village of Trojeglava (today in Dežanovac, near Daruvar, Croatia, with still a considerable percentage of Czechs living there) on 1 October 1944.

Goran Imbrišić & Željko Heimer, 15 April 2008

German minority in Vojvodina and
eastern Croatia

Flag of the German minority - Image by Željko Heimer, 12 October 2003

The flag of the German minority was horizontally divided black-red-gold with a red star
outlined in yellow placed in the middle.

Željko Heimer, 12 October 2003

Hungarian minority in Vojvodina and eastern Croatia

Flag of the Hungarian minority - Image by Željko Heimer, 12 October 2003

The flag of the Hungarian minority was horizontally divided red-white-green with a red star
outlined in yellow placed in the middle. Th Hungarian community was largest in Vojvodina and eastern Croatia where this flag was mainly to be seen, but existed also in eastern Slovenia.

Željko Heimer, 12 October 2003

Italian minority in Istria

Flag of the Italian minority - Image by Željko Heimer, 7 April 2000

The flag of the Italian minority was vertically divided green-white-red with a red star
outlined in yellow placed in the middle.
This flag was very often seen flying together with
national, republic
(Croat or
Slovenian), and
Socialist Party flags.

The Italian flag with the red star had been used in Fiume
since about 1943 and officially since 1946 or 1947 as the flag of the
Italian ethnic group in Yugoslavia. The flag was still in use until
1990 and the break of Yugoslavia, when it was replaced by the Italian
flag, now used by Italians living both in Slovenia and Croatia.

Željko Heimer, 7 April 2000

Polish minority in Croatia

There were about 1,000 Poles in Croatia according to censuses made
in 1961, 1971 and 1981, which is comparable with some other ethnic
minorities that were reportedly using flags, so there must have been an
appropriate flag for those, at least in theory.

Željko Heimer, 9 April 2002

Romanian minority in eastern Vojvodina

Flag of the Romanian minority - Image by Željko Heimer, 12 October 2003

The flag of the Romanian minority was vertically divided blue-yellow-red with a red star
outlined in yellow placed in the middle. The yellow border was achieved unfrequently by heavy stiching, so it was visible even if of the same colour as the field.

Željko Heimer, 12 October 2003

Ruthenian and Ukrainian minority in western Slavonia and Vojvodina

Flag of the Ruthenian and Ukrainian minority - Image by Željko Heimer, 10 May 1999

The Ruthenian (Rusini, Walachian) and Ukrainian minority used the defaced
Ukrainian flag, horizontally divided blue-yellow with a red star outlined in yellow placed in the middle. The yellow border of the star was either achieved by stiching or it was simply ignored and omitted.
They Ruthenians and Ukrainians consider themselves as one nation, or fairly close, and the name they
use for themselves mainly depends on the time when they migrated to
this part of the country. Today in Croatia,
Ruthenians still use the same flag as the Ukrainians, and indeed they
usually have common societies etc.

Željko Heimer, 10 May 1999

Slovak minority in western Slavonia and Vojvodina

Flag of the Slovak minority - Image by Željko Heimer, 30 March 1998

The Slovak minority flag was similar to the flag of the
People's Republic of Slovenia.
I saw some flags on a Serbian television channel, in an old 1976 report from
the municipality of Kovačiža, Vojvodina, where the Slovaks represent
about 50% of the population. Flags had the star slightly skewed a to
the hoist

Velid Jerlagić, 30 March 1998

Turkish minority in Sanžak and Macedonia

Two reported flags of the Turkish minority - Images by Željko Heimer, 12 October 2003

The flag of the Turkish minority was red with white a white crescent and five-pointed star in the middle and a red star outlined in yellow placed in canton.

A similar flag, but without the white star, was reportedly in use by Muslims in Kosovo and Macedonia. It is not clear whether this is an incorrect flag for Turks, though these Muslims were of Slavic origin, similarly as the Bosnian Muslims.